Elizabeth
The food was finger-licking. Is 'finger-licking' an adjective?
31 мая 2010 г., 16:16
Ответы · 7
3
In a grammatically correct sentence, every word MUST function as some part of speech. So, yes ... "finger-licking" is a hyphenated construction that functions as an adjective. These are not uncommon: "That was an eye-popping display of strength!" "Our end-of-year sale begins tomorrow." "The two teams will meet in a best-of-five series to decide the championship."
31 мая 2010 г.
1
Yes, in this sentence 'finger-lickin' functions as an adjective. It describes the noun - the food. In the phrase 'finger-lickin' good' it is an adverb, modifying the adjective - good.
1 июня 2010 г.
1
Of all you folks, really only Joe is right; 'finger-licking' really functions as an adjective; like: "A beautiful event." "An eye-catching event."
31 мая 2010 г.
1
"Finger-licking" means just that: you lick your fingers, to get all the taste of the food. The full phrase is "finger-licking good" (=delicious!). I can't really imagine using "finger-licking" separate, unless you were making a joke.
31 мая 2010 г.
1
Finger licking is not an adjective, its a phrase actually which simply means "excellent", specially for foods. It was originated by KFC, as its advertising slogan.
31 мая 2010 г.
Подробнее
Все еще не нашли ответы?
Напишите свои вопросы, и пусть вам помогут носители языка!